The Girls’ Guide to Love and Supper Clubs

By Dana Bate

“The kind of book you just devour. Hannah Sugarman is Bridget Jones with a killer cinnamon bun recipe.”
—Stacey Ballis, author of Good Enough to Eat and Off the Menu

“[A] delicious debut.”
—Sarah Pekkanen, author of These Girls

Hannah Sugarman seems to have it all. She works for an influential think tank in Washington, D.C., lives in a swanky apartment with her high-achieving boyfriend, and is poised for an academic career just like her parents. The only problem is that Hannah doesn’t want any of it. What she wants is much simpler; to cook.

When her relationship collapses, Hannah seizes the chance to do what she’s always loved and launches an underground supper club out of her new landlord’s town house. Though her delicious dishes become the talk of the town, her secret venture is highly problematic, given that it is not, technically speaking, legal. She also conveniently forgets to tell her landlord she has been using his place while he is out of town.

On top of that, Hannah faces various romantic prospects that leave her guessing and confused, parents who don’t support cooking as a career, and her own fears of taking a risk and charting her own path. A charming romantic comedy, The Girls’ Guide to Love and Supper Clubs is a story about finding yourself, fulfilling your dreams, and falling in love along the way.

“Hannah is a girl I can relate to. . . . She reminds us that dreams are often chocolate frosted and hard fought, but the key ingredient is believing in yourself.”
—Joy Wilson, author of Joy the Baker Cookbook

Reviews

“Journalist and debut novelist Bate deftly conjures up a witty, resilient heroine, surrounds her with delightful friends and frenemies, and sends them all on a rollicking quest for love and delicious food.”
–Kirkus Reviews